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View Full Version : Becoming an Ohioan.



Foxyangel0425
09-08-2005, 10:26 AM
After several decades of living in Ohio, I know how to be an Ohioan. While I was learning, written guidelines would have been helpful. So I've written some to assist others:
1. Know the State casserole. The State casserole consists of canned green beans, Campbell's cream of mushroom soup and dried onions. You can safely take this casserole to any social event and know that you will be accepted. In fact, Neil Armstrong almost took this casserole to the moon in case he encountered alien life there. NASA nixed the plan out of concern that the casserole would overburden the Apollo rocket at lift-off.

2. Get used to food festivals. The Ohio General Assembly, in an effort to grow bigger offensive linemen, passed legislation years ago requiring every incorporated community to have at least one festival per year dedicated to food. Thus, Sugarcreek honors Swiss cheese, Troy delights in Strawberries, Bucyrus has a bratwurst celebration, Reynoldsburg has the tomato festival, Millersport has the sweet corn festival, Circleville has a pumpkin festival, Jackson has an apple festival, Deerfield has an apple butter festival, Rio Grande has the farm festival, Cincinnati has the Taste, and Gahanna, seeking an edge over other towns, has recently introduced the Triglyceride and Low-density Lipoprotein Festival. In addition to festivals, each county has a fair. It is your duty as an Ohioan to attend these festivals/fairs and at least buy an elephant ear.

3. Get to know the geography....Of Florida, I mean. I've run into Ohioans who couldn't tell you where Toledo is but they know the exact distance from Fort Myers to Bonita Springs. That's because all Ohioans go to Florida in the winter. Or plan to when they retire. Or are related to retired Ohioans who have a place in Sarasota. We consider Florida to be the Lower Peninsula of Ohio.

4. If you can't afford to spend the winter in Florida, use the state excuse, which is that you stay here because you like the change of seasons. You'll be lying, but that's OK. We've all done it.

5. Speaking of Ohio weather, wear layers or die. The thing to remember about Ohio seasons is that they can occur at anytime. We have spring-like days in January and wintry weekends in October. April is capable of providing a sampling of all four seasons in a single 24-hour period. For these reasons, Ohio is the Layering Capital of the World. Even layering, however, can pose danger...Golfers have been known to dress for hypothermia and end up dead of heat stroke because they couldn't strip off their layers of plaid fast enough on a changeable spring morning.

6. Don't take Ohio place names literally. Upper Sandusky is below regular Sandusky. Circleville is square. East Liverpool has no counterpart to the west. Also, if a town has the same name as a foreign capital... Lima or Berlin or Louisville, for example......you must not pronounce it that way lest you come under suspicion as a spy. Hence, it's not LEE-ma as in Peru, but LYE-ma as in bean, and it's BER-lin, not ber-LIN, like in Germany. Louisville in Ohio is pronounced Looisville, not looeyville as in Kentucky. Newark in Ohio is pronounced Nerk, not NEW-ark as in New Jersey.

7. Become mulch literate. Ohioans love mulch and appreciate its subtle differences. Learn the difference between hardwood, cypress and pine bark at a minimum. Researchers think the state affinity with mulch derives from its relatively flat terrain. People have a subconscious need for topography, and when it can't be supplied naturally, they are more likely to make little mulch hillocks in their front yards.

8. In order to talk sports with obsessive fans in Ohio, you have to be knowledgeable on three levels -- professional, college and high school. The truly expert Ohio sports fan knows not only the name of the hotshot quarterback at Ohio State University, but also what professional football team he's interested in, how much he bench-presses, who he dates, his major and what he got on his biology quiz last week.

9. Remember that Ohioans are never the first to embrace trends. When we do embrace them, we do so with a Midwestern pragmatism. For example, if you see an Ohioan with a nose ring, there's a good chance he's had it undercoated to guard against rust.

10. The best way to sell something in Ohio is to attach the term "Amish" to it. The product need not be genuinely Amish. This would explain the existence of Amish moo shu pork.

I hope you found this guide to be useful. If it offends you, please let me know and I will bring green bean casserole to your home to make amends.

dober250R
09-08-2005, 12:20 PM
that's funny ****!!! i live really close to ohio, so i can relate..........

Doober
09-08-2005, 12:47 PM
hahh im proud to be an ohioan:macho

reddeisel
09-08-2005, 12:59 PM
hey i'm from NERK, ohio. the truest statement being that about the sports we love our bucks- GO O-STATE.:D

BAWB
09-08-2005, 01:13 PM
oh thats good stuff. I must say it's all sadly true. I am born and raised in Ohio and wouldn't have it any different..see #4 :rolleyes:

One good thing is all the country roads you can do about whatever you want :devil:

fmf250ex
09-08-2005, 05:43 PM
I LIVE IN OHIO TWO!!

Guy400
09-08-2005, 06:32 PM
3, 4 and 5 are the honest truth. I was born in Florida and we were stationed in N.C. for a little while. When my dad got out of the service we moved up here and I can't wait to get back to N.C. someday.

Oust Bob Taft!!

Potimus
09-08-2005, 07:40 PM
Theyre all true. Ohio is a hell of a place.

Rich250RRacer
09-08-2005, 07:41 PM
I live in the murder capital of the U.S. , Youngstown!

lilwitting
09-09-2005, 03:57 PM
i live in navarre ohio he he he

Doober
09-09-2005, 04:42 PM
i live in fremont ohio

Predator38
09-09-2005, 05:01 PM
Dover...here.....:D

trict_out
09-09-2005, 05:46 PM
columbus here...damn straight

G Impala 63n70
09-09-2005, 07:22 PM
Lorain ohio here